#!/bin/bash -e # # summary of how this script can be called: # * install # * install # * upgrade # * abort-upgrade # . /usr/share/debconf/confmodule if [ -n "$DEBIAN_SCRIPT_DEBUG" ]; then set -v -x; DEBIAN_SCRIPT_TRACE=1; fi ${DEBIAN_SCRIPT_TRACE:+ echo "#42#DEBUG# RUNNING $0 $*" 1>&2 } export PATH=$PATH:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin MYADMIN="/usr/bin/mysqladmin --defaults-file=/etc/mysql/debian.cnf" mysql_datadir=/var/lib/mysql mysql_upgradedir=/var/lib/mysql-upgrade # Try to stop the server in a sane way. If it does not success let the admin # do it himself. No database directories should be removed while the server # is running! Another mysqld in e.g. a different chroot is fine for us. stop_server() { if [ ! -x /etc/init.d/mysql ]; then return; fi # Return immediately if there are no mysql processes running # as there is no point in trying to shutdown in that case. if ! pgrep mysqld > /dev/null; then return; fi set +e if [ -x /usr/sbin/invoke-rc.d ]; then cmd="invoke-rc.d mysql stop" else cmd="/etc/init.d/mysql stop" fi $cmd errno=$? set -e # 0=ok, 100=no init script (fresh install) if [ "$errno" != 0 -a "$errno" != 100 ]; then echo "${cmd/ */} returned $errno" 1>&2 echo "There is a MySQL server running, but we failed in our attempts to stop it." 1>&2 echo "Stop it yourself and try again!" 1>&2 db_stop exit 1 fi } ################################ main() ########################## this_version=10.3 max_upgradeable_version=5.7 # Check if a flag file is found that indicates a previous MariaDB or MySQL # version was installed. If multiple flags are found, check which one was # the biggest version number. for flag in $mysql_datadir/debian-*.flag do # The for loop leaves $flag as the query string if there are no results, # so the check below is needed to stop further processing when there are # no real results. if [ $flag = "$mysql_datadir/debian-*.flag" ] then break fi flag_version=`echo $flag | sed 's/.*debian-\([0-9\.]\+\).flag/\1/'` # Initialize value if empty if [ -z "$found_version" ] then found_version=$flag_version fi # Update value if now bigger then before if dpkg --compare-versions "$flag_version" '>>' "$found_version" then found_version=$flag_version fi done # If an upgrade is detected, proceed with it automatically without # requiring any user interaction. # # However, if the user attempts to downgrade, warn about the incompatibility. # Downgrade is detected if the flag version is bigger than $this_version # (e.g. 10.1 > 10.0) or the flag version is smaller than 10.0 but bigger # than $max_upgradeable_version. if [ ! -z "$found_version" ] then echo "$mysql_datadir: found previous version $found_version" if dpkg --compare-versions "$found_version" '>>' "$this_version" then downgrade_detected=true fi if dpkg --compare-versions "$found_version" '>>' "$max_upgradeable_version" \ && dpkg --compare-versions "$found_version" '<<' "10.0" then downgrade_detected=true fi fi # Don't abort dpkg if downgrade is detected (as was done previously). # Instead simply move the old datadir and create a new for this_version. if [ ! -z "$downgrade_detected" ] then db_input critical mariadb-server-10.3/old_data_directory_saved || true db_go echo "The file $mysql_datadir/debian-$found_version.flag indicates a" 1>&2 echo "version that cannot automatically be upgraded. Therefore the" 1>&2 echo "previous data directory will be renamed to $mysql_datadir-$found_version and" 1>&2 echo "a new data directory will be initialized at $mysql_datadir." 1>&2 echo "Please manually export/import your data (e.g. with mysqldump) if needed." 1>&2 mv -f $mysql_datadir $mysql_datadir-$found_version # Also move away the old debian.cnf file that included credentials that are # no longer valid mv -f /etc/mysql/debian.cnf /etc/mysql/debian.cnf-$found_version fi # to be sure stop_server # If we use NIS then errors should be tolerated. It's up to the # user to ensure that the mysql user is correctly setup. # Beware that there are two ypwhich one of them needs the 2>/dev/null! if test -n "`which ypwhich 2>/dev/null`" && ypwhich >/dev/null 2>&1; then set +e fi # # Now we have to ensure the following state: # /etc/passwd: mysql:x:100:101:MySQL Server:/nonexistent:/bin/false # /etc/group: mysql:x:101: # # Sadly there could any state be present on the system so we have to # modify everything carefully i.e. not doing a chown before creating # the user etc... # # creating mysql group if he isn't already there if ! getent group mysql >/dev/null; then # Adding system group: mysql. addgroup --system mysql >/dev/null fi # creating mysql user if he isn't already there if ! getent passwd mysql >/dev/null; then # Adding system user: mysql. adduser \ --system \ --disabled-login \ --ingroup mysql \ --no-create-home \ --home /nonexistent \ --gecos "MySQL Server" \ --shell /bin/false \ mysql >/dev/null fi # end of NIS tolerance zone set -e # if there's a symlink, let's store where it's pointing, because otherwise # it's going to be lost in some situations for dir in DATADIR LOGDIR; do checkdir=`eval echo "$"$dir` if [ -L "$checkdir" ]; then mkdir -p "$mysql_upgradedir" cp -dT "$checkdir" "$mysql_upgradedir/$dir.link" fi done # creating mysql home directory if [ ! -d $mysql_datadir -a ! -L $mysql_datadir ]; then mkdir $mysql_datadir fi # checking disc space if LC_ALL=C BLOCKSIZE= df --portability $mysql_datadir/. | tail -n 1 | awk '{ exit ($4>1000) }'; then echo "ERROR: There's not enough space in $mysql_datadir/" 1>&2 db_stop exit 1 fi # Since the home directory was created before putting the user into # the mysql group and moreover we cannot guarantee that the # permissions were correctly *before* calling this script, we fix them now. # In case we use NIS and no mysql user is present then this script should # better fail now than later.. # The "set +e" is necessary as e.g. a ".journal" of a ext3 partition is # not chgrp'able (#318435). set +e find $mysql_datadir ! -uid $(id -u mysql) -print0 | xargs -0 -r chown mysql find $mysql_datadir -follow -not -group mysql -print0 2>/dev/null \ | xargs -0 --no-run-if-empty chgrp mysql set -e db_stop #DEBHELPER# exit 0